| Here's Chomsky quoted in the article, from 1969: > But it must be recognized that the notion of "probability of a sentence" is an entirely useless one, under any known interpretation of this term. He was impressively early to the concept, but I think even those skeptical of the ultimate value of LLMs must agree that his position has aged terribly. That seems to have been a fundamental theoretical failing rather than the computational limits of the time, if he couldn't imagine any framework in which a novel sentence had probability other than zero. I guess that position hasn't aged worse than his judgment of the Khmer Rouge (or Hugo Chavez, or Epstein, or ...) though. There's a cult of personality around Chomsky that's in no way justified by any scientific, political, or other achievements that I can see. |
There's no point minimizing his intelligence and achievements, though.
His linguistics work (eg: grammars) is still relevant in computer science, and his cynical view of the West has merit in moderation.